Use Microsoft Exchange Server 2003 Load Simulator (LoadSim) as a benchmarking tool to simulate the performance load of MAPI clients. LoadSim allows you to test how a server running Exchange 2003 responds to e-mail loads. To simulate the delivery of these messaging requests, you run LoadSim tests on client computers. These tests send multiple messaging requests to the Exchange server, thereby causing a mail load. LoadSim is a useful tool for administrators who are sizing servers and validating a deployment plan. Specifically, LoadSim helps you determine if each of your servers can handle the load to which they are intended to carry. Another use for LoadSim is to help validate the overall solution.

Use Jetstress to verify the performance and stability of a disk subsystem prior to putting an Exchange server into production. Jetstress helps verify disk performance by simulating Exchange disk Input/Output (I/O) load. Specifically, Jetstress simulates the Exchange database and log file loads produced by a specific number of users. You use Performance Monitor, Event Viewer, and ESEUTIL in conjunction with Jetstress to verify that your disk subsystem meets or exceeds the performance criteria you establish. After a successful completion of the Jetstress Disk Performance and Stress Tests in a non-production environment, you will have ensured that your Exchange disk subsystem is adequately sized (in terms of performance criteria you establish) for the user count and user profiles you have established. It is highly recommended that the Jetstress user read through the tool documentation before using the tool.

Sysinternals Live: We’re excited to announce the beta of Sysinternals Live, a service that enables you to execute Sysinternals tools directly from the Web without hunting for and manually downloading them. Simply enter a tool’s Sysinternals Live path into Windows Explorer or a command prompt as \\live.sysinternals.com\tools\ or view the entire Sysinternals Live tools directory in a browser at http://live.sysinternals.com.

Mainly technicians know this problem very well: it doesn’t help at all just to create perfect documents, which elaborate technical details – to be able to reach the decision making people, the facts and the goal you want to emphasize, have to be packed into a nice PowerPoint presentation.

I always found it tedious, that the master templates are changed on a regularly basis – it naturally often occurs, that parts of a new presentation are produced through “copy & paste” out of an existing presentation. But of course, because the presentation must be CI consistent and general information regarding theme and or author cannot simply be copied, it is not possible to just copy the whole slide – and therefore additional work is created.

Wouldn’t it be better, if you didn’t need to use time and effort for this and could concentrate completely on the subject and contents – as there is no kind of mechanism, which can help with the contents of the presentation?

Wouldn’t it be useful, if a tool
– could build a finished presentation from a basis of templates? (Formatting, etc – brief “rebranding”…)
– could generate a suitable header on the basis of the content?
– could create a consistent foot note?
– could adjust the resolution of included pictures, so space can be saved?
– could loosen up the presentation with pictures suitable taken from flickr?

I am currently working on developing such a tool. My original idea – rebuilding a presentation with the “look and feel” of a new template – did work out very well (even when one shouldn’t: within a few seconds a presentation from the competitor turns into your own ðŸ˜‰ – just theoretically of course), so I implemented the creation of header and foot note as well as the automation of adding suitable pictures too. The later is still beta, but I’m sure it’s going to accomplish a lot, because pictures suitable with the subject help to emphasize the main subject.

I am still considering, whether I should offer the tool to download; anyway I want to check first if there are enough people interested, therefore I would like to start a sort of first survey of demand: could you use this tool? If yes, then please leave a comment stating what for and ideas for further improvements are also welcome.

The Microsoft Group Policy Diagnostic Best Practice Analyzer (GPDBPA) for Windows XP and Windows Server 2003 is designed to help you identify Group Policy configuration errors or other dependency failures that may prevent settings or features from functioning as expected.

Active Directory Explorer (AD Explorer) is an advanced Active Directory (AD) viewer and editor. You can use AD Explorer to easily navigate an AD database, define favorite locations, view object properties and attributes without having to open dialog boxes, edit permissions, view an object’s schema, and execute sophisticated searches that you can save and re-execute.

AD Explorer also includes the ability to save snapshots of an AD database for off-line viewing and comparisons. When you load a saved snapshot, you can navigate and explorer it as you would a live database. If you have two snapshots of an AD database you can use AD Explorer’s comparison functionality to see what objects, attributes and security permissions changed between them.